Chandler v. Bellanca Aircraft Corp.

162 A. 63, 19 Del. Ch. 57, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 5, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 162 A. 63 (Chandler v. Bellanca Aircraft Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. Bellanca Aircraft Corp., 162 A. 63, 19 Del. Ch. 57, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 16 (Del. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

The principal question which this case presents is whether or not the 168,165 shares standing in the name of the voting trustees which G. M. Bellanca [64]*64for himself as trustee and as proxy for Kahn, trustee, and Andrew Bellanca as trustee undertook to vote, were properly voted. This in turn depends on the sufficiency in law of Kahn’s proxy to Bellanca.

Before considering the main question, it is perhaps best to clear away three contentions made by the defendants, any one of which, if good, would render unnecessary the consideration of the main question.

First. Does the fact that the complainant is the holder of a voting trust certificate disqualify him as a party who is entitled to call for a review of the election? This question is raised because Section 31 of the Act (Revised Code 1915, § 1945, as amended by 35 Del. Laws, c. 85, § 15) under which the proceedings were instituted specifies that a review of ah election can be had on “application by any stockholder.” It is contended that because the complainant transferred his stock to voting trustees, receiving from them only a voting trust certificate, he does not qualify as a “stockholder” of the corporation.

In Cooney Co. v. Arlington Hotel Co., 11 Del. Ch. 286, 101 A. 879, this court held that the holder of a voting trust certificate who had transferred his shares to voting trustees is liable for the statutory assessment for the benefit of creditors to the extent of the amount not paid in on the shares represented by the voting trust certificate, notwithstanding the statute fixed the liability on the “stockholders.” In New Jersey the Court of Errors and Appeals in U. S., etc., Co. v. O’Grady, 75 N. J. Eq. 301, 71 A. 1040, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 732, held that the holder of a voting trust certificate who had transferred his shares to trustees under a voting trust agreement was a stockholder within the meaning of the statute which permitted the filing of a bill for a receiver by “stockholders” of an insolvent corporation. The principle of these cases supports the right of the complainant to resort to the remedy made available by Section 31 of the act to stockholders of the corporation. Consider[65]*65ing the equities of the situation of a holder of voting trust certificates, it would be an unjustifiably invidious distinction that would remove him from the category of “stockholder” to which the principle of the foregoing cases would assign him, when all that he seeks to do is to ascertain whether or not one of the important purposes of the trust to which he is a party, the one in fact which it was the principal object of himself and his co-depositors to achieve, had been faithfully served.

Second. It is next contended that the complainant was elected a director at the-meeting whose result he now assails, accepted and acted in the office, and has been chosen by the board so elected and has acted as treasurer of the corporation, and that by reason of these facts he is estopped from now complaining that the election of directors was an invalid one. To this it is sufficient, without more, to say that the complainant was not at the meeting and is not shown to have been aware of the circumstances which transpired at the meeting. Since he became advised of the facts, he has consistently protested against the legal propriety of the proceedings.

Third. It is contended that if the vote of the 168,165 shares be rejected as the complainant desires, yet G. M. Bellanca voted 300 shares which belonged to' him individually and that they being lawful votes and all that were cast (ignoring the 168,165), the Bellanca ticket thus appears to have been elected. This contention invites consideration of the question of whether a majority of the votes cast at a stockholders’ meeting will carry an election, if such majority is in fact a minority of those present though not all voting. I find it unnecessary however to consider that question because on the present showing I am not prepared to say whether or not G. M. Bellanca is entitled in this proceeding to be regarded as a voting stockholder in right of the 300 shares. I leave that as an open question.

Last and finally then, I approach the main question— [66]*66was the proxy from Kahn, voting trustee, to Bellanca, another voting trustee, one that Bellanca was at liberty to exercise?

Voting trusts enjoy statutory recognition in this State. Section 18 of the General Corporation Law, as amended {Revised Code 1915, § 1932, as amended by 37 Del. Laws, c. 129, § 6), in its second paragraph, provides as follows:

“One or more stockholders may by agreement in writing deposit capital stock with or transfer capital stock to any person or persons or corporations authorized by their charter to act as Trustee, for the purpose of vesting in said person, persons or corporations the right to vote thereon for any period of time determined by such agreement, not exceeding ten years, upon terms and conditions stated in such agreement pursuant to which such person, persons or corporations shall act. Such agreement may contain any other lawful provisions not inconsistent with said purpose. After filing a copy of such agreement in the principal office of the corporation in the State of Delaware, which copy shall be open to the inspection of any stockholder of the corporation or any depositor under said agreement daily during business hours, the certificates of stock so transferred shall be surrendered and canceled, and new certificates therefor shall be issued to such transferee or transferees, who may be designated Voting Trustees, in which said new certificates it shall appear that they are issued pursuant to such agreement, and in the entry of such transferee or transferees as owners of such stock in the proper books of the issuing corporation that fact shall also be noted, and thereupon said transferee or transferees may vote upon the stock so transferred during the period in such agreement specified; stock standing in the name of such Voting Trustees may be voted either in person or by proxy, and in voting said stock, such Voting Trustees shall incur no responsibility as stockholder, Trustee, or otherwise, except for their own individual malfeasance. In any case where two or more persons are designated as Voting Trustees, and the right and method of voting any stock standing in their names at any meeting of the corporation are not fixed by the agreement appointing said Trustees, the right to vote said stock and the manner of voting the same at any such meeting shall be determined by a majority of said Trustees, or if they be equally divided as to the right and manner of voting the same in any particular case, the vote of said stock in such case shall be divided equally among the Trustees.”

[67]*67The statute was enacted in 1925 (34 Del. Laws, c.. 112, § 6), and the voting trust here involved was therefore created under statutory warrant. The question of the legality of so-called voting trusts as being in contravention of public policy, a question which has given rise to a contrariety of judicial opinion in various of the states where no statute authorizing them exists, cannot therefore arise in the instant case.

The complainant’s argument emphasizes the essential trust feature of the voting trust.

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Bluebook (online)
162 A. 63, 19 Del. Ch. 57, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-bellanca-aircraft-corp-delch-1932.